Terry Gilliam Movies
For most of Terry Gilliam's early career, fans of the popular comedy show Monty Python's Flying Circus assumed that he was British, since Python's other five members were natives of Britain. But the innovative animator and future director, who spent more time behind the scenes than in front of the camera, was actually the troupe's only American member. Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on November 22, 1940, Gilliam was briefly employed as an assistant editor for Help! magazine (a job that introduced him to English comedian John Cleese, who was in NYC posing for a comic photo-strip in the magazine); he then emigrated to England in 1967. Soon after gilliam arrived in the U.K., he began working on Do Not Adjust Your Set, a popular children's TV show, developing his eccentric animated cartoons, which put into motion a hodgepodge of images, including photographs, cutouts from magazines, and famous works of art. Gilliam's contributions to the show were geared more toward adults, as his surrealistic stream-of-consciousness segments, drenched in black humor, were beyond the grasp of most children.
In 1969, Gilliam was asked by Cleese and others to join the absurdist comedy troupe Monty Python. In addition to writing for Monty Python's Flying Circus, Gilliam also contributed his animated interludes, for which he was pretty much left to his own devices; the other Pythons just told him how much time he needed to fill and never gave him any narrative direction. Gilliam began offering his iconoclastic vision to moviegoers with the comedy troupe's first original film, Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), which he co-directed with fellow Python Terry Jones. An instant cult classic, the movie contained all the requisite Python elements: absurdist humor, self-referential parody, and extremely quotable dialogue. The following year, Gilliam had his first outing as a solo director with Jabberwocky (1976). Based on the poem by Lewis Carroll, the film featured a medieval setting similar to that of Holy Grail and starred Pythonite Michael Palin. Along with Python's brand of irreverent humor, the film featured glimmers of the visual resplendence that would become the director's trademark. But critics found it awkward and repetitive, and audiences largely stayed away.
Following Jabberwocky's relative failure, Gilliam regrouped with his fellow Pythonites, co-creating The Life of Brian, the tale of a man with the misfortune of being confused with Jesus Christ. He left the directing duties to Terry Jones, focusing on animation, screenwriting, and acting. Gilliam returned to directing with Time Bandits (1979), a surreal journey through history led by a small boy and several dwarves. Bearing many similarities to Jabberwocky, Time Bandits relied less on repetition and moved the audience more briskly from one scene to the next. It did well at the box office and put Gilliam in the ranks of directors to watch.
After co-directing with Terry Jones the third and final Python film, Monty Python's the Meaning of Life (1983), Gilliam made what many people consider his masterpiece, the dystopian satire Brazil (1985). Instead of journeying back to the Middle Ages, Gilliam boldly predicted a retro-1930s future of anonymous office drones commanded by an all-powerful computer. Blindingly imaginative, the film starred Jonathan Pryce as Sam Lowery, who attempts to escape the stifling bureaucratic system by fantasizing about being a superhero, and later by actually battling the powers-that-be in his own cowardly fashion. Consistently blurring the line between fantasy and reality and uncompromising in its surreal eccentricity, Gilliam's masterwork has been called Orwellian, Kafkaesque, and Luddite. A failure at the box office, Brazil has made up for that disappointment with its cult status. In addition to critical praise and a Los Angeles Film Critics award for Best Film, Gilliam received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay.
It was four years before Gilliam stepped behind the camera again, for The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1989). Returning to historical fantasy, Gilliam tells the unlikely tales of the title character as though they really happened. The Baron explores the inside of a volcano, takes a hot air balloon to the moon, gets swallowed by a whale, and quells a war that he himself started. Munchausen's stories were less well known to most Americans than to audiences in Britain, where the film won British Academy Awards for Best Production Design, Best Makeup, and Best Costume Design.
Gilliam followed Munchausen with his most accessible work to date, 1991's The Fisher King. Foregoing much of his usual ornate visual style, the director focused on characters rather than flashy spectacle; the relationships among a depressed former DJ (Jeff Bridges), his enabling girlfriend (Mercedes Ruehl, in an Oscar-winning performance), and a homeless man (Robin Williams) who saves him from suicide are intertwined in a riveting, funny, and ultimately heart-warming way. Gilliam balances humor, pathos, and story-telling, while avoiding mawkishness. He received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director, and the movie won the Silver Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival.
Gilliam returned to the director's chair in 1995, achieving his biggest box office hit with the science fiction epic 12 Monkeys. Starring Bruce Willis, Madeleine Stowe, and Brad Pitt (in an Oscar-nominated performance), the movie tells the story of a prisoner from the future sent back in time to save the world from a catastrophic virus. But the scientists of 2035 haven't quite mastered the art of time travel, and they accidentally send Bruce Willis' character back to 1990 instead of 1996. The film was a critical and commercial success despite its hard-to-follow plot, allowing Gilliam the freedom to take even more creative risks. His next project, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998), an adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson's 1971 novel, was the ultimate "trip" movie. Detailing Thompson's drug-addled journey to the gambling capital of the world, it starred Johnny Depp as the author's alter ego, Raoul Duke. The movie was the perfect vehicle for Gilliam to create an alternate universe fueled by the mind-bending substances in which the lead characters freely and plentifully indulge. With melting faces, a lounge full of human-sized lizards, bats flying in the desert, and a demon with breasts on its back, the movie didn't need and didn't really have a plot. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas was the definition of a love-it-or-hate-it movie.
In 2000, the director began working on Good Omens, a comedy/fantasy based on the book Good Omens: or, The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, a humorous story about the apocalypse. That endeavor fell by the wayside, however, when Gilliam attempted to film his lifelong dream project, The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, in late 2000. From injured actors to faulty props to inclement weather conditions, the $30 million shoot became a textbook example of Murphy's Law, and was shut down despite pleas from the haggard director. In 2003, however, the project found new, unexpected life in Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe's documentary Lost in La Mancha, a comic tale of cinematic defeat. Intended as a "making-of" featurette to be included on the finished film's DVD, the documentary chronicled the morose fate of Gilliam's botched production in all of its painful, hilariously unbelievable glory, and became a minor art-house attraction. Gilliam subsequently fought to buy back the rights to The Man Who Killed Don Quixote in light of all the renewed interest, but it remained to be seen whether the director would get a chance to finish what he started. ~ Eric Bloch, All Movie Guide
The School Prize Awards are interrupted by two men, both claiming to be the Bishop of East Anglia. The director of the 30-second version of 2001: A Space Odyssey and the 10-second version of Rear Window is interviewed. The president of the Board of Trade is tossed in a lake, while Dame Irene Stoat is skewered by a samurai sword during a poetry recitation. The Book of the Month Club delivers a free dead Indian and the M-4 Motorway. TV host Timmy Williams cheerily goads Nigel Watt into suicide. A marriage-license registrar sets his cap for three male clients. And election night results are posted for the Silly Party, the Slightly Silly Party, the Very Silly Party, and the Sensible Party, as candidates Jethroe Q. Walrustitty and Tarquin Fintimlinbinwhinbimlimbus-stop F'Tang-F'Tang-Ole-Biscuit Barrel await the final returns. Originally telecast November 3, 1970, "School Prizes" features Rita Davies and Ian Davidson in the supporting cast. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Telecast live from the Grill-o-Mat Snack Bar in Paignton, this episode begins with another round of the Blackmail Quiz Show, culminating with the lucrative (for the host) "Stop the Film" segment. Sir William Gore Fisk tries vainly to escape after delivering the annual financial report for the Society of Putting Things on Top of Other Things. Mr. Praline hosts a discussion on the Population Explosion which ends with a group of POW escapees (including, presumably, Sir William Gore Fisk) burrowing through a painting of "The Last Supper." A butler refuses to believe that a mirror, a china cabinet, and a Brazilian dagger can fall by themselves. And Ken Clean-Air System rubs gravel in his hair before his championship bout with Petulia Wilcox. With all this happening, there's no time for the host's funny walk; maybe next week. Carol Cleveland, Ian Davidson, Connie Booth and "Mrs. Idle" make guest appearances on "Live From the Grill-o-Mat," which originally aired October 27, 1970. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
After a preview of comic BBC attractions (stay tuned for "Snooker My Way"), the host of "Archeology Today" quizzes his guests on the disparity of their heights. Professor Lucien Kastner swears to avenge his honor, and succeeds during a 1920 Egyptian expedition. A testimonial for the National Truss comes to an end when an absent-minded woman is beaten up by a boxer. Two sketches are abandoned in mid-joke, while a third routine details the animated exploits of Eggs Diamond and his gang. Two versions of a sketch featuring Mr. and Mrs. Sniveling Little Rat-Faced Git are prepared to mollify the censor. Australians Roy and Hank Spim use atomic missiles to hunt moths. And Beethoven tries to complete his Fifth Symphony despite interruptions from a mynah bird, a carpet sweeper, and an unsolicited visit from Colin "Chopper" Mozart. Guest star Carol Cleveland's mother appears in the "Git" sketch. "Archaeology Today" first aired November 18, 1970. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Mr. and Mrs. Attila the Hun star in a sitcom with their kids Robin and Jennie, and Uncle Tom the butler. Later, Attila visits Charles Crompton, the stripping doctor, whose "peeling" skills are matched by the Secretary of State for Commonwealth Affairs. Leslie Ames, the Council Ratcatcher, matches wits with an army of killer sheep, who subsequently rob the Westminster Bank. In "News for Parrots," a parrot performs part three of A Tale of Two Cities, followed by Village Idiot Arthur Figgis explaining the rigors of his job. A green Chesterfield sofa takes on the Icelandic cricket team, just before the opening gun of the Epsom furniture race. And Mrs. Scum is a contestant on "Spot the Brain Cell." Carol Cleveland (as Mrs. Attila the Hun) and Ian Davidson are guest-stars in this November 11, 1970, episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Season two of Monty Python's Flying Circus was launched September 15, 1970, with the episode titled "Dinsdale" (for lack of a better name, no doubt). The Minister of Home Affairs, a small patch of gooey brown liquid, and cross-dressing Air Chief Marshall Sir Vincent "Kill the Japs" Foster appear on "Face the Press," as Mrs. G. Pinnet watches at home -- only to be informed by two gas men that she's in the wrong house. After a customer with a nasty wink tries to rent a white pussycat, a chest of drawers and a bit of pram, we are introduced to Mr. Teabags and Mr. Putey of the Ministry of Silly Walks (stay tuned for the French version, "La Marche Futile"). While investigating the criminal activities of Doug and Dinsdale Piranha, Inspector Harry "Snapper" Organs interrupts a performance of Man of La Mancha. And a huge animated spiny norman stalks the streets of London, shouting "Dinsdale!" (for lack of a better name, no doubt). Also appearing in this thrilling episode are David Ballantyne, John Hughman, and Stanley Mason. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The five Gumbies tortuously announced "The Architect Sketch," wherein Mr. Wiggin designs a lethal apartment house. The BBC apologizes not only for this sketch, but also for the "Insurance Sketch," featuring Mr. Devious, the Straight Man, the Vicar, and an unseen Nude Lady. An episode of the thrilling espionage series "The Bishop" finds the hero vainly attempting to prevent an exploding baptism. Mr. and Mrs. Potter refuse to participate in a documentary, lest the cameramen discover who is hiding in Mr. Potter's bathtub. Door-to-door poetry reader Wombat Harness hits sexual pay dirt when he quotes from Wordsworth. And a chemist looks on while a customer is arrested for telling an after-shave joke. Sandra "Buzz" Richards and Stanley "Buzz" Mason appear on "The Buzz Aldrin Show," which first aired October Buzz Twentieth, Nineteen Buzz Seventy. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The Dummy Princess Margaret presents the British Show Biz Awards, with first prize going to the remains of the late Sir Alan Waddle. At a salon party in 1895, Oscar Wilde trades dirty epigrams with George Bernard Shaw and the Prince of Wales. Back at the awards ceremony, David Niven's Refrigerator announces that Pier Paolo Pasolini's The Third Test Match has won sixth prize. The Kamikaze Scotsman returns from the previous episode "A Book at Bedtime" to top off a sketch about brain salesmen. The Northwest squares off against the Southwest in the International Wife-Swapping Tournament, which segues into a rugby match on "Grandstand." And the awards ceremony ends with the writers of the "Dirty Vicar" sketch winning the Mountbatten Trophy. Carol Cleveland makes a brief appearance. With the January 18, 1973 telecast of "Grandstand," the third season of Monty Python's Flying Circus came to a close. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, 18th Century highwayman Dennis Moore steals lupins from the rich to give to the poor. He later changes his M.O., stealing from the poor to give to the rich. In other developments, boxer Jack Bodell squares off against Sir Kenneth Clarke for the heavyweight championship; astrologers Mrs. Once Off and Irene Trepidacius foretell the future with audio-visual aids; and a doctor robs his patients, only to lose the cash to a man-headed frog. Also featured are an episode of "Victoria Regina," anachronistically invaded by Dennis Moore; the 15th Annual Ideal Loon Exposition; and "Prejudice," in which the host runs out of ethnic epithets and stages a "Shoot the Poof" contest. First seen on January 4, 1973, "Dennis Moore" features Carol Cleveland, Nosher Powell, and a cast of dozens. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, dyslexic Sir Jeremy Toogood struggles to read Sir Walter Scott's The Red Gauntlet. The Queen's Own Kamikaze Highlanders go into training, with only one candidate surviving. A man from the No Time to Lose Advice Center tries to sell a used phrase. Terry Gilliam offers a 60-second animated remake of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Part II of "Frontiers of Medicine" reveals that penguins are more intelligent than BBC program planners. The sole surviving Scottish Kamikaze fails to explode upon hitting the Kremlin, resulting in a nail-biting visit from the Unexploded Scotsman Disposal Squad. The viewer is invited to "Spot the Looney" during an adaptation of Ivanhoe. And two documentary narrators duke it out over claiming rights to a discussion of Sir Walter Scott. The show ends (almost) with coming attractions of such BBC series as "Dad's Poovies" and "Limestone, Dear Limestone." "A Book at Bedtime" was originally telecast January 11, 1973. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
A Scotsman threatens to blow up an airliner, only to be ejected from the sketch by the show's director. A discussion of the significance of the Nude Organ Player is set aside in favor of "New Housing Developments," which depicts a British housing project populated entirely by literary characters from Dickens, Bronte, Milton, Hardy, and Samuel Butler -- most of whom end up working on a new highway system. Ken Very Big Liar and Clement Onan hire the Amazing Mystico to hypnotize people into thinking that they're living in a new building. Superintendent Harry "Boot In" Swalk discusses the recent wave of unauthorized hangings. A pair of morticians conduct a guided tour of their digs, during which the Lord Mayor's brain comes loose. Paraguay's Francisco Huron and Britain's Don Roberts compete in the Men's Hide and Seek Olympic Finals. The Cheap Laughs invade the home of Roger and Beatrice Robinson. And Prof. Herman Khan, director of the Institute for Split-Crotch Panties, investigates the financial structure of the planet Algon. Carol Cleveland, Marie Anderson, and Mrs. Idle made brief appearances in "The Nude Man," which first aired December 14, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The owner of the Tudor Job Agency is unable to locate a travelling companion for Sir Walter Raleigh, but he does a land-office business in dirty books. Inspector Henry Gaskell raids the agency, only to be transformed into Sir Philip Sydney, whereupon the viewer is treated to Sidney's life story. A cartoon segment brings Shakespeare's lost classic "Gay Boys in Bondage" to life. "The Free Repetition of Doubtful Words, Skits, Spoofs, Japes and Vignettes by a Very Underrated Writer" focuses on the misadventures of Mr. Peepee. Roger Last discusses the possibility of life after death with three corpses. And Dr. E. Henry Thripshaw names a disease after himself, then sells the stage, movie and T-shirt rights. Featured in the cast are Carol "Four Revealing Poses" Cleveland, Rosalind Bailey, and The Fred Tomlinson Singers. "E. Henry Thripshaw's Disease" was originally telecast December 21, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The centerpiece of this November 30, 1972, episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus is a grisly slow-motion sequence from Sam Peckinpah's production of the musical comedy Salad Days, replete with tennis-racket impalements and blood-soaked pianos. Also on the docket is "The Adventures of Biggles," in which the aviator hero tries to dictate a letter to King Haakon of Norway and Princess Margaret during a WWI dogfight (or, in this case, a sheep fight). Bert Tagg leads a mountain-climbing expedition along the north face of the Uxbridge Road. The resident of 24 Parker Street insists that her house is not a lifeboat. A Good Fairy from BBC program control turns into a frog. And, in the episode's other "money scene," Mr. Mousebender tries to make a purchase at Mr. Wensleydale's cheese shop. Nicki Howorth was featured in the unusually large cast. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, Reg Pither's bicycle trip through the countryside is fraught with peril. He ends up in a hospital, convinced that he's really pop star Clodagh Rogers. Resuming his journey in the company of Mr. Gulliver, Pither embarks upon a search for Lenin and Trotsky, culminating in a visit to the USSR 42nd International Clambake. Only a "scene missing" card saves our heroes from the wrath of that internationally popular ventriloquist Marshal Bulganin. One of the few episodes of Monty Python's Flying Circus with an actual storyline -- not to mention a genuine beginning, middle, and end -- "The Cycling Tour" was written by Michael Palin and Terry Jones, and features Carol Cleveland. The episode was first broadcast December 7, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The titular event includes a swimsuit and evening-gown competition, and a 15-second summary of Remembrances of Things Past, performed as a madrigal by The Fred Tomlinson Singers. Col. Sir John Teasy Weasy Butler describes the International Hairdresser's Expedition of Mt. Everest. After coming attractions for "A Magnificent Festering," the fire brigade waits until Friday to answer a call from Mrs. Little and her headhunter son Eamon. Veronica Smalls offers advice as to throwing a party during a Communist uprising. Mrs. Tick takes a tour of a language laboratory, which ends with a performance of Sandy Wilson's musical version of The Devils. Mr. Smoketoomuch tries to book a world tour from Mr. Bounder. And a discussion of the Brontosaurus by Anne Elk (Miss) is interrupted with a reprise of the Proust Madrigal, even though the Competition has already been won by the Girl With the Biggest Tits. First telecast November 16, 1972, this Monty Python's Flying Circus episode was graced with another prominent appearance by Carol Cleveland. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, Mr. T.F. Gumby's brain is removed by a Harley Street surgeon. A special telecast of the All-Essex Badminton Championship Finals forces the BBC to stage the Nine O'clock News on a cardboard TV screen. An exploration of Lake Pahoe yields a hallucinogenic Royal Navy recruiting film, an outbreak of necrophilia, and an announcer who turns into Long John Silver. Mr. Badger offers his theories on the Magna Carta in mime, which is adjudged the silliest sketch ever performed on this series. As for the war on pornography. . .well, you should have been watching the show before the opening credits. This episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus first aired November 23, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The programme begins with Episode Thlee of Erizabeth L, featuring Sir Flancis Dlake and the Spanish Almada. The Fraud Film Squad arrests a man for impersonating Lucino Visconti, and the Salvation Fuzz likewise swings into action. An old lady prepares a dead-rat dessert for her husband, while her son reports the presence of a dead bishop. This leads to an impromptu jungle expedition, where a deadly battle with a gorilla is replaced by a scene from "Ken Russell's Garden Club -- 1958." Once the identity of the phony Visconti is established, police remain baffled by a man who claims to be Michelangelo Antonioni. And after the closing credits roll, it's off to The Argument Clinic (no, it isn't!) and a surprise appearance by Inspector Fox of the Light Entertainment Police (Comedy Division, Spec. Flying Squad). Also featuring Rita Davies, Carol Cleveland and The Fred Tomlinson Singers (who perform "The Money Song"), "The Money Programme" was originally broadcast November 2, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, Mr. Graham gets away with speaking in anagrams until he's caught in a spoonerism. Mrs. Scum wins the grand prize on "Beat the Clock," but doesn't live to tell about it. A merchant banker orders beloved horse stars Champion and Trigger to beat each other to death; other crucial bouts include Terence Ratigan vs. an Enraged Goose, and Princess Margaret vs. Her Breakfast. A male recruit in the Women's Army is mad because he has no funny lines, so his recruiters change to funnier jobs. Real-life BBC newscaster Richard Baker is backed up by surreal images during a broadcast of "The Bols Story." And a desperate chase provides the climax for the spy thriller "Pantomime Horse is a Secret Agent." Carol Cleveland guest stars, but you'd never know it from the credits. "Blood, Devastation, Death, War and Horror" first aired November 9, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Created in 1969 as the British Broadcasting Corporation's answer to America's Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (one of its guiding forces was BBC executive and former Laugh-In writer Barry Took), Monty Python's Flying Circus was both the title of the series and the name of the comedy troupe appearing in the show. (The name was chosen precisely because it didn't mean anything!) The cast -- Cambridge and Oxford graduates all -- included John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin. A sixth Python, American-born Terry Gilliam, provided the series' zany, non sequitur animated sequences and occasionally appeared on camera. Most of the female roles were handled by Connie Booth (Cleese's then-wife) and Carol Cleveland. Virtually indescribable to anyone who hasn't seen it, the series (which opened each week to the tune of John Philip Sousa's "Liberty Bell March") was a wild, irreverent collection of open-ended comedy sketches, sometimes tenuously tied in with a single theme. The individual sketches were usually connected only by the sonorous announcement, "And now for something completely different," which also served as the title for the group's first theatrical feature film. Favorite Python targets included dull BBC talk shows and documentaries, idiotic legal restrictions, bean-counting bureaucrats, incomprehensible foreigners, and venerated British traditions. For some curious reason, all of the Pythonites enjoyed dressing up in women's clothing, usually portraying frumpy, strident-voiced suburban housewives. Among the series' more famous bits were "The Pet Shop," "The Lumberjack Song," "The Spanish Inquisition," "Department of Silly Walks," "The World's Deadliest Joke," "Hell's Grannies," "The Annual Twit of the Year Awards," and a lengthy science fiction movie parody in which evil aliens (who looked like French pastries) transformed all British subjects into Scotsmen, the better to win the annual Wimbledon tennis match (a premise which, in context, makes perfect sense). Though the 45-episode series enjoyed an enormous following in England, it didn't arrive in America until 1974, when the package was picked up by PBS (ABC had evinced interest in the property, but insisted upon cutting all the "naughty bits" and arbitrarily inserting commercials). In addition to making stars out of virtually all its cast members, Monty Python's Flying Circus has spawned several comedy record albums, movie spin-offs, and many solo projects like Fawlty Towers. In 1999, the series, long available on videocassette, was picked up for yet another go-round by the Arts and Entertainment cable network. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
An increasingly spectacular series of intermissions punctuates this final episode of season one of Monty Python's Flying Circus. Hopkins the Maitre D' is the specialty du jour at a vegetarian restaurant. The filmed audience of the Women's Institute approves of the "Me, doctor, she, nurse, he, Mr. Burtenshaw" routine. "Historical Impressions" features Cardinal Richelieu's celebrated imitation of Petula Clark and Napoleon's rendition of the R-101 Disaster. Trevor gets his wish when he asks for more Police Fairy Stories. Mr. Attila the Hun turns himself over to the authorities. And a hippie and a naked woman emerge from within the abdomen of Dr. Larch. All this, and "The Albatross Sketch" too. Originally broadcast January 18, 1970, "Intermission" features the talents of David Ballantyne and Carol Cleveland. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
"Part 2: The Llama Live From Golders Green" is followed by a man with a tape recorder up his nose (he later returns in stereo). Double-visioned Sir George Head hires Arthur Wilson for a mountain-climbing expedition, then hires Arthur Wilson for a mountain-climbing expedition. Incompetent Bevis the barber never wanted to be Bevis the barber, as he and the Mountie Chorus explain in "The Lumberjack Song." Ken Buddha and his Inflatable Knees fill in for Harry Fink. And sweethearts Victor and Iris play host to Arthur Name, Brian and Audrey Equatol, an Old Man and His Goat, and six singing Miners. One of the most famous of all episodes of Monty Python's Flying Circus (thanks in great part to the vocal stylings of The Fred Tomlinson Singers, not to mention Carol Cleveland and Connie Booth), "The Ant -- an Introduction" made its British TV bow on December 21, 1969. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, Frank the Plumber is invited to appear in a BBC sketch. A bank robber finds himself in a lingerie shop. The host of "It's a Tree" interviews a Chippendale writing desk who does celebrity impersonations. The Vocational Guidance Counselor tries to help Mr. Anchovy and solicits funds from the viewers. The first man to jump the English Channel attempts to eat Chichester Cathedral. The tunnel project from Godalming to Java is forgotten in favor of "pet conversions." A gorilla applies for the post of town hall librarian. And a bedroom farce is cancelled for lack of interest. With Barry Cryer and Ian Davidson in the supporting cast, "Untitled" was originally telecast December 28, 1969. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, listeners protest as the sounds of the Warsaw Concerto are heard wafting from the bathroom. "The World of History" introduces a solemn team of undertakers who wend their way throughout the rest of the episode. The murder of Inspector Tiger is investigated by Assistant Chief Constable There's a Man Behind You and Constable Fire. Football player Jimmy Buzzard is interviewed, sort of. This week's cast of "Interesting People" includes Mr. Howard Stools, half an inch tall; Ali Bayan of Egypt, who's stark raving mad; the Rachel Toovey Bicycle Bell Choir; a cat with influenza; the invisible Mr. Thomas Waters; and the self-explanatory Keith Maniac of Guatemala. And "The World of History" features a reenactment of the Battle of Pearl Harbor, performed by Mrs. Rita Fairbanks and her Townswomen's Guild. Carol Cleveland and Ian Davidson make significant appearances in this January 4, 1970, episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In this episode, six chapters of "The Naked Ant" are telescoped into a battle between a polar bear and a railroad engineer. An executive board meeting is periodically interrupted by the sight of men falling from the roof of a tall building. The answer to this mystery is provided by an economist, a university professor, and a pro cricket player. Mr. Hilter, Mr. Bimmler, and Ron Viventroff attempt to revive the Bocialist party from the balcony of a boarding house in Minehead. A police sergeant won't listen to a burglary report unless it is delivered in a squeaky voice. "Vox Pops" spotlights the finals of the 127th Upper-Class Twit of the Year Contest. And the Right Honorable Lambert Warbeck suffers disaster during a broadcast of the Wood Party. Featuring Connie Booth and The Sixteen-Ton Weight, "The Naked Ant" originally aired January 11, 1970. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
A desperate suburban couple summons Confuse-a-Cat, Ltd. ("Thank God we've arrived in time!") A Customs Official bypasses a confessed smuggler in favor of strip-searching a vicar, leading to a round-table discussion of customs enforcement with a duck, a cat, and a lizard. Actor Sandy Camp surrenders an illicit bag of sandwiches. A BBC newsreader incriminates himself. "Edited Highlights of Tonight's Romantic Movie" offers a montage of such phallic symbols as a tossed caber. The Head of the Careers Advisory Board is no help at all. And a burglar suffers the fate reserved for all encyclopedia salesmen. Also featuring Carol Cleveland, this episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus was originally broadcast November 23, 1969. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Arthur Figgis makes a return appearance to discuss the German composer Johann Gambolputty de von
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gumberaber-shonedanker-kalbsfleisch-mittler-aucher von Hautkopft of Ulm. Inspector Praline and Superintendent Parrot investigate the Whizzo Quality Chocolate Company, exclusive manufacturers of Crunchy Frog. "The Dull Life of a City Stockbroker" is followed by an American Indian's negative reaction to the news that Cicely Coutneidge will not be appearing this evening. Young Lochinvar breaks up another wedding. And heads roll in the offices of 20th Century Vole. Ian Davidson makes an appearance on this November 30, 1969, episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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gumberaber-shonedanker-kalbsfleisch-mittler-aucher von Hautkopft of Ulm. Inspector Praline and Superintendent Parrot investigate the Whizzo Quality Chocolate Company, exclusive manufacturers of Crunchy Frog. "The Dull Life of a City Stockbroker" is followed by an American Indian's negative reaction to the news that Cicely Coutneidge will not be appearing this evening. Young Lochinvar breaks up another wedding. And heads roll in the offices of 20th Century Vole. Ian Davidson makes an appearance on this November 30, 1969, episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide









